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    Fence manufacturing (Fences manufacturer shows the secrets of welded wire fence for fencing) – Video - July 19, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Fence manufacturing (Fences manufacturer shows the secrets of welded wire fence for fencing)
    Fence manufacturing that made on the basis of welded panel. Buy fence system and make right choice! http://www.frunzezabor.com/en/whereto/40/378/?SECTION_ID=...

    By: Fences Perfosteel

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    Fence manufacturing (Fences manufacturer shows the secrets of welded wire fence for fencing) - Video

    Kharm – White Picket Fences – Video - July 19, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Kharm - White Picket Fences
    DOWNLOAD HERE: https://www.hospitalrecords.com/shop/release/various-artists/medic18-new-blood-010 Released in 2010 and taken from #39;New Blood 010 prime;. #39;New Blood...

    By: MedSchoolMusic

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    Kharm - White Picket Fences - Video

    bodies (with) in fences (Trailer by Peter A. Egger) – Video - July 19, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder


    bodies (with) in fences (Trailer by Peter A. Egger)
    A piece by Saskia Hlbling and Laurent Goldring choreography, staging: Saskia Hlbling and Laurent Goldring, dance, performance, choreography: Saskia Hlblin...

    By: DANSKIAS

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    bodies (with) in fences (Trailer by Peter A. Egger) - Video

    Minecraft Hardcore Survival Ep 29 fences and potions – Video - July 18, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Minecraft Hardcore Survival Ep 29 fences and potions
    minecraft hardcore survival.

    By: DSGxTennessee

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    Minecraft Hardcore Survival Ep 29 fences and potions - Video

    Pakistan to try to mend fences with Afghanistan – NBC40.net - July 18, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder

    By KATHY GANNON Associated Press

    ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) - Pakistan is sending a top official to the Afghan capital this weekend to try to mend fences with its uneasy neighbor, and hanging in the balance are U.S. efforts to arrange peace talks with the Taliban.

    The trip comes roughly two weeks after the Taliban closed their newly opened political office in the Gulf state of Qatar following angry complaints from Afghanistan that the Islamic militant movement had set it up as a virtual rival embassy, with a flag and sign harkening back to the days they ruled the country.

    The political office was part of a U.S. plan to launch peace talks with the Taliban to end the protracted war, with American and other NATO combat troops scheduled to withdraw from Afghanistan by the end of next year. But the talks ended before they could even begin amid the uproar last month.

    Pakistan, which had helped persuade Taliban to agree to sit down with the Americans - and possibly with the Afghans after that - now contends that intransigence, suspicion and Afghan President Hamid Karzai's reluctance to invite his political opponents at home to the negotiating table in Qatar is hobbling efforts to start the talks.

    "They (Taliban) listen to us. We have some influence but we can't control them," Sartaj Aziz, Pakistan's special adviser on national security and foreign affairs, told The Associated Press in advance of his trip to Kabul on Saturday.

    "But they (Taliban) also say that the High Peace Council is not fully representative," Aziz said, referring to Karzai's 80-member negotiating team. "President Karzai should invite other people to join them."

    Mohammad Ismail Qasimyar, a senior member of the Afghan High Peace Council, told the AP that if the Taliban were making wider representation on the negotiating team a condition to restarting talks, then it "would be worth considering." But he was suspicious of Pakistan, wanting assurances first that the demand was from the Taliban and not Pakistan.

    Rancor and suspicion between Pakistan and Afghanistan run deep. Kabul blames Islamabad for not cracking down on Taliban militants who use the border area as a base to carry out attacks on Afghans and international forces in Afghanistan. For its part, Pakistan accuses Afghanistan of sabotaging peace efforts with its provocative statements, overtures to India and refusal to acknowledge the bloody war Islamabad is waging in its border regions.

    One senior Western official, who is deeply familiar with the peace talks, said the depth of the animosity between the two countries hinders efforts to reach a negotiated peace with the Taliban.

    The rest is here:
    Pakistan to try to mend fences with Afghanistan - NBC40.net

    Podcasts: Podcast: #WOSOuting to West End Fences starring Lenny Henry - July 18, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Podcast: Toby Stephens and Anna Chancell... PODCASTS Listen to the post-show Q&A from our latest Outing, to Paulette Randall's acclaimed revival of August Wilson's Fences at the Duchess Theatre

    Lenny Henry and Tanya Moodie Nobby Clark Last night we took 120 theatregoers to see the Theatre Royal Bath revival of August Wilson's Fences starring Lenny Henry.

    The production, which is directed former Talawa artistic director Paulette Randall, opened in Bath in February and arrives in the West End following a national tour. It runs at the Duchess Theatre until 14 September 2013.

    Wilson's 1983 play, which forms part of the late dramatist's epic ten-play cycle about the black experience in 20th-century America, centres on Troy Maxson (Henry), a former baseball star who is now a garbageman and consumed by bitterness.

    Following the show we were joined by cast members for a post-show Q&A.

    To listen to the Q&A, which was hosted by Terri Paddock, click the 'play' button below; or to subscribe and download from itunes, click here.

    As always, please feel free to email your comments and thoughts about the show, as well as any of your favourite insights from last night to feedback@whatsonstage.com and don't forget to tweet using #wosouting! We would love to hear from you.

    For details of other upcoming Outings, click here.

    Tags: Lenny HenryFences

    By providing information about entertainment and cultural events on this site, WhatsOnStage.com shall not be deemed to endorse, recommend, approve and/or guarantee such events, or any facts, views, advice and/or information contained therein.

    Read the original here:
    Podcasts: Podcast: #WOSOuting to West End Fences starring Lenny Henry

    Features: Live Tweeting: #WOSOuting to West End Fences starring Lenny Henry - July 18, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Podcast: Toby Stephens and Anna Chancell... PODCASTS Listen to the post-show Q&A from our latest Outing, to Paulette Randall's acclaimed revival of August Wilson's Fences at the Duchess Theatre

    Lenny Henry and Tanya Moodie Nobby Clark Last night we took 120 theatregoers to see the Theatre Royal Bath revival of August Wilson's Fences starring Lenny Henry.

    The production, which is directed former Talawa artistic director Paulette Randall, opened in Bath in February and arrives in the West End following a national tour. It runs at the Duchess Theatre until 14 September 2013.

    Wilson's 1983 play, which forms part of the late dramatist's epic ten-play cycle about the black experience in 20th-century America, centres on Troy Maxson (Henry), a former baseball star who is now a garbageman and consumed by bitterness.

    Following the show we were joined by cast members for a post-show Q&A.

    To listen to the Q&A, which was hosted by Terri Paddock, click the 'play' button below; or to subscribe and download from itunes, click here.

    As always, please feel free to email your comments and thoughts about the show, as well as any of your favourite insights from last night to feedback@whatsonstage.com and don't forget to tweet using #wosouting! We would love to hear from you.

    For details of other upcoming Outings, click here.

    Tags: Lenny HenryFences

    By providing information about entertainment and cultural events on this site, WhatsOnStage.com shall not be deemed to endorse, recommend, approve and/or guarantee such events, or any facts, views, advice and/or information contained therein.

    Read the original post:
    Features: Live Tweeting: #WOSOuting to West End Fences starring Lenny Henry

    New Petco fences suiting Padres fine - July 18, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The Padres took on the Rockies on a drizzly afternoon at Petco Park.

    The Padres on Friday return from the All-Star break to a three-game series in St. Louis, where their road woes may well continue against the first-place Cardinals.

    At home in San Diego, though, they are 27-23 this season, seemingly undeterred and, in some respects, boosted by the reconfigured Petco Park.

    Its much more fair, Will Venable said recently of the previously cavernous ballpark. It definitely is making a difference.

    Its dimensions shortened last offseason, Petco Park is serving up more home runs per game than in any year since 2006. While overall run production has yet to budge in a venue that remains distinctly pitcher-friendly, the Padres appear to have shed a bit of the psychological baggage gained in 2004 with the stadiums opening.

    With the walls in right field and left-center moved in by an average of 10 feet, Petco Park has seen an average of 1.92 home runs per game this season, making it the National Leagues ninth-toughest ballpark in which to homer. (Petco Park has seen a higher home run average only in 2006, at 2.06 per game.)

    Last year Petco Park saw 1.35 home runs per game, making it the NLs second-toughest ballpark in which to homer. Only San Francisco's AT&T Park (1.04) presented more of a challenge.

    Its better having it this way, Chase Headley said, because when you hit a ball like that, it deserves to be a homer and there were times last year when it wasnt.

    Fifty home games into this new era, there have been 16 homers hit at Petco Park that wouldnt have cleared the fences last year. Opponents hold a 9-7 advantage. That ratio is consistent with the 102 home runs allowed by the Padres overall this season, compared to the 88 hit by San Diego.

    "Park factor" compares the rate of stats at home vs. the rate of stats on the road. A rate higher than 1.000 favors the hitter. Below 1.000 favors the pitcher.

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    New Petco fences suiting Padres fine

    Pakistan to Try to Mend Fences With Afghanistan - July 18, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Pakistan is sending a top official to the Afghan capital this weekend to try to mend fences with its uneasy neighbor, and hanging in the balance are U.S. efforts to arrange peace talks with the Taliban.

    The trip comes roughly two weeks after the Taliban closed their newly opened political office in the Gulf state of Qatar following angry complaints from Afghanistan that the Islamic militant movement had set it up as a virtual rival embassy, with a flag and sign harkening back to the days they ruled the country.

    The political office was part of a U.S. plan to launch peace talks with the Taliban to end the protracted war, with American and other NATO combat troops scheduled to withdraw from Afghanistan by the end of next year. But the talks ended before they could even begin amid the uproar last month.

    Pakistan, which had helped persuade Taliban to agree to sit down with the Americans and possibly with the Afghans after that now contends that intransigence, suspicion and Afghan President Hamid Karzai's reluctance to invite his political opponents at home to the negotiating table in Qatar is hobbling efforts to start the talks.

    "They (Taliban) listen to us. We have some influence but we can't control them," Sartaj Aziz, Pakistan's special adviser on national security and foreign affairs, told The Associated Press in advance of his trip to Kabul on Saturday.

    "But they (Taliban) also say that the High Peace Council is not fully representative," Aziz said, referring to Karzai's 80-member negotiating team. "President Karzai should invite other people to join them."

    Mohammad Ismail Qasimyar, a senior member of the Afghan High Peace Council, told the AP that if the Taliban were making wider representation on the negotiating team a condition to restarting talks, then it "would be worth considering." But he was suspicious of Pakistan, wanting assurances first that the demand was from the Taliban and not Pakistan.

    Rancor and suspicion between Pakistan and Afghanistan run deep. Kabul blames Islamabad for not cracking down on Taliban militants who use the border area as a base to carry out attacks on Afghans and international forces in Afghanistan. For its part, Pakistan accuses Afghanistan of sabotaging peace efforts with its provocative statements, overtures to India and refusal to acknowledge the bloody war Islamabad is waging in its border regions.

    One senior Western official, who is deeply familiar with the peace talks, said the depth of the animosity between the two countries hinders efforts to reach a negotiated peace with the Taliban.

    "It's kind of a no-win situation," he said, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject. "When they're (the Pakistanis) not helpful, there's a lot of suspicion (from Afghanistan) that they're being unhelpful, and when they are helpful there's a lot of suspicion that if they're helpful then maybe this isn't something that's good for Afghanistan."

    See the article here:
    Pakistan to Try to Mend Fences With Afghanistan

    Hiding tall fences with vines and shrubs can accelerate rotting of the fences - July 18, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder

    By Tony Tomeo

    Silicon Valley Community Newspapers

    Good old-fashioned suburbia will never be the same. Bigger modern homes on smaller modern parcels leave little space for gardening and trees. What is not shaded by the taller homes is shaded by the taller fences, which are needed for privacy since the homes are closer together. Building codes in most municipalities limit the height of fences, but lattice screens are often added on top for extra height.

    Because lumber is not of the quality that it was when shorter light-duty redwood fences were built decades ago, relatively expensive modern fences do not last nearly as long. They might last longer if they would get repaired instead of replaced when only the posts rot. Green technology seemed to work better before it became trendy.

    Ironically, no one wants these bigger and bolder fences that are closer to home to be so prominent in the landscape. We try to obscure them with vines that can tear them apart, or shrubbery that can push them over. Watering these vines and shrubs accelerates rot in the posts.

    Shrubbery intended to obscure a fence should not be so voracious that it wants to displace the same fence that it is intended to obscure. Some types of pittosporum work nicely because they support themselves without leaning against other features in their surroundings too much, even if they eventually get quite large. However, they do get quite thick, and can obscure a fence so well that no one would miss the fence if it

    Many types of vines can be kept much closer to a fence than shrubbery can, but most tend to be more destructive. Star jasmine works nicely if allowed to climb a trellis directly in front of the fence, but should not be allowed to get between planks in the fence or to get too intertwined in lattice. If it gets too fluffy, it can be shorn back like a light hedge.

    Clinging vines like creeping fig can be very appealing on fences and can be shorn like hedges, but will eventually necessitate the replacement of the fences that they climb. For those who appreciate such a tailored appearance, replacement of the affected fences every few years is a fair compromise.

    Flower of the Week: Toadflax

    Toadflax really does look like baby snapdragon, which is its other common name. The tiny, half-inch-wide flowers are similarly bisymmetrica and arranged in small trusses, although the diminutive leaves are distinctively narrow.

    Excerpt from:
    Hiding tall fences with vines and shrubs can accelerate rotting of the fences

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